Thomas
Merton: A letter to a Young Activist
Letter to a Young Activist
“Do not depend on the hope of
results. When you are doing
the sort of work you have taken on, essentially an apostolic work, you may have
to face the fact that your work will be apparently worthless and even achieve
no result at all, if not perhaps results opposite to what you expect. As you
get used to this idea, you start more and more to concentrate not on the
results but on the value, the rightness, the truth of the work itself. And
there too a great deal has to be gone through as gradually you struggle less
and less for an idea and more and more for specific people. The range tends to
narrow down, but it gets much more real. In the end, it is the reality of
personal relationships that saves everything.
The big results are not in your hands or mine, but they suddenly
happen, and we can share in them; but there is no point in building our lives
on this personal satisfaction, which may be denied us and which after all is
not that important.
The next step in the process is for you to see that your own
thinking about what you are doing is crucially important. You are probably
striving to build yourself an identity in your work, out of your work and your
witness. You are using it, so to speak, to protect yourself against
nothingness, annihilation. That is not the right use of your work. All the good
that you will do will come not from you but from the fact that you have allowed
yourself, in the obedience of faith, to be used by God’s love. Think of this
more and gradually you will be free from the need to prove yourself, and you
can be more open to the power that will work through you without your knowing
it.
The great thing after all is to live, not to pour out your life in the service of a myth: and we turn the best things into myths. If you can get free from the domination of causes and just serve Christ’s truth, you will be able to do more and will be less crushed by the inevitable disappointments. Because I see nothing whatever in sight but much disappointment, frustration and confusion.
The great thing after all is to live, not to pour out your life in the service of a myth: and we turn the best things into myths. If you can get free from the domination of causes and just serve Christ’s truth, you will be able to do more and will be less crushed by the inevitable disappointments. Because I see nothing whatever in sight but much disappointment, frustration and confusion.
The real hope, then, is not in something we think we can do but
in God who is making something good out of it in some way we cannot see. If we
can do God’s will, we will be helping in this process. But we will not
necessarily know all about it before hand”.
Enough of this…it is at least a gesture…I will keep you in my
prayers.
All the best, in Christ,
Tom